During the late stages of stellar evolution in massive stars (C fusion and
later), the fusion luminosity in the core of the star exceeds the star's
Eddington luminosity. This can drive vigorous convective motions which in turn
excite internal gravity waves. The local wave energy flux excited by convection
is itself well above Eddington during the last few years in the life of the
star. We suggest that an interesting fraction of the energy in gravity waves
can, in some cases, convert into sound waves as the gravity waves propagate
(tunnel) towards the stellar surface. The subsequent dissipation of the sound
waves can unbind up to several M⊙ of the stellar envelope. This
wave-driven mass loss can explain the existence of extremely large stellar mass
loss rates just prior to core-collapse, which are inferred via circumstellar
interaction in some core-collapse supernovae (e.g., SNe 2006gy and PTF 09uj,
and even Type IIn supernovae more generally). An outstanding question is
understanding what stellar parameters (mass, rotation, metallicity, age) are
the most susceptible to wave-driven mass loss. This depends on the precise
internal structure of massive stars and the power-spectrum of internal gravity
waves excited by stellar convection.Comment: Version accepted to MNRA